Reading ‘House of Jacob’ in Isaiah 48:1-11 in light of Benjamin

Isaiah 48:1-11 has been described as a difficult passage due to a perceived discord between its harsh tone and the message of comfort espoused elsewhere in Isaiah 40-55. This paper analyses this passage with regard to four groups of arguments, namely, proposals of a Judahite origin for the text, the...

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Main Author: Quine, Cat
Format: Article
Published: Society of Biblical Literature 2017
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/50445/
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author Quine, Cat
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author_sort Quine, Cat
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description Isaiah 48:1-11 has been described as a difficult passage due to a perceived discord between its harsh tone and the message of comfort espoused elsewhere in Isaiah 40-55. This paper analyses this passage with regard to four groups of arguments, namely, proposals of a Judahite origin for the text, the archaeological evidence for settlement continuity in the Benjaminite region in the Neo-Babylonian period, the development and use of the patriarchal traditions in the sixth century, and studies of hidden polemic. By drawing these together, this paper proposes that the house of Jacob in Isaiah 48:1-2, could be understood as addressing a sixth century Judahite community in the Benjaminite region, perhaps in the vicinity of Bethel.
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spelling nottingham-504452020-05-04T18:52:54Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/50445/ Reading ‘House of Jacob’ in Isaiah 48:1-11 in light of Benjamin Quine, Cat Isaiah 48:1-11 has been described as a difficult passage due to a perceived discord between its harsh tone and the message of comfort espoused elsewhere in Isaiah 40-55. This paper analyses this passage with regard to four groups of arguments, namely, proposals of a Judahite origin for the text, the archaeological evidence for settlement continuity in the Benjaminite region in the Neo-Babylonian period, the development and use of the patriarchal traditions in the sixth century, and studies of hidden polemic. By drawing these together, this paper proposes that the house of Jacob in Isaiah 48:1-2, could be understood as addressing a sixth century Judahite community in the Benjaminite region, perhaps in the vicinity of Bethel. Society of Biblical Literature 2017-07-01 Article PeerReviewed Quine, Cat (2017) Reading ‘House of Jacob’ in Isaiah 48:1-11 in light of Benjamin. Journal of Biblical Literature, 137 (2). 339 -357. ISSN 1934-3876 (In Press) https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.15699/jbl.1372.2018.292881 doi:10.15699/jbl.1372.2018.292881 doi:10.15699/jbl.1372.2018.292881
spellingShingle Quine, Cat
Reading ‘House of Jacob’ in Isaiah 48:1-11 in light of Benjamin
title Reading ‘House of Jacob’ in Isaiah 48:1-11 in light of Benjamin
title_full Reading ‘House of Jacob’ in Isaiah 48:1-11 in light of Benjamin
title_fullStr Reading ‘House of Jacob’ in Isaiah 48:1-11 in light of Benjamin
title_full_unstemmed Reading ‘House of Jacob’ in Isaiah 48:1-11 in light of Benjamin
title_short Reading ‘House of Jacob’ in Isaiah 48:1-11 in light of Benjamin
title_sort reading ‘house of jacob’ in isaiah 48:1-11 in light of benjamin
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/50445/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/50445/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/50445/